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[ecrea] CfP: Social Criticism in Women's Movements and (queer)Feminist Public Spheres
Mon Jun 20 12:31:47 GMT 2016
*feministische studien, Call Heft 1/2017: **Social Criticism in Women’s
Movements and (queer-)Feminist Public Spheres*
Feminist interventions in social processes of transformation are
essential in the fights for emancipation and gender equality. They are
informed by feminist social criticism, pointing at many problems in
social, cultural, political relations and developments. They stimulate
the analysis of social inequality, but also the critique of capitalism,
neo-liberalism as well as patriarchalism and heteronormativity
(Wischermann 2013: 188).
Up until today, women’s associations and movements, as well as
lesbian-feminist movements and queer activists are campaigning for
emancipation and gender equality: they are fighting locally,
transregionally, transnationally, and in solidarity against the lack of
respect and insufficient support, as well as for the protection of human
rights of all genders. They protest against inequality between men and
women and advocate for participation in decision-making processes on all
levels of politics, economy, health, education, environment, and
peace-keeping.
During these fights, feminist movements have at the same time
appropriated and shaped new symbolic and material (queer-)feminist
spaces; changed the limits of what is visible and expressible; and they
have found their own cultural forms of expression. This shift of borders
coincides with a critique of rationalist conceptions of politics and of
objectivist conceptions of knowledge.
The study of women’s movements has shown that media play a central role
in feminist counter public spheres. From the pamphlet to twitter, media
have been used as powerful tools to make their issues and demands
subject of public debate, by not only letting them surface but also
publically scandalising them. Inequality and exclusion are thereby
uncovered and participation in the hegemonic public sphere is demanded.
Media and other cultural productions like magazines of the feminist
movements, zines, and blogs, but also slogans and songs have also been
important for networking and developing a collective understanding. They
promote a feminist awareness, incite the desire to participate in joint
debates and learning processes – even in controversy – and enable
empowering experiences in the collective struggle for change.
Thereby, feminist public spheres suggest the expansion of feminist
agency, since changing society was and is still related to processes of
identity formation. The forms of access and the productive use of media
play a role in the stabilization of old and in the establishment of new
power relations and hierarchies; this holds true for feminist movements
as well, which have been accompanied by multifaceted controversies and
debates.
Feminist public spheres have always utilised the entire spectrum of
media communication for gaining public access and networking; for
example today, the results of the World Women’s Conference 2016 in Nepal
are circulated via YouTube and other social media. Communication forms
and forums of women’s movements and (queer-)feminist movements have
without a doubt multiplied, yet the question remains whether this also
goes along with a strengthening of their position.
Feminist movements have always been reflected and represented in
hegemonic public spheres and mainstream media; mostly in a way that
restricts their outreach and legitimises sanctions against their
activists. Resistance against feminist demands is articulated in media
that leads to feminists being threatened and villainized. Anti-feminist
networks, which today are articulating themselves quite vehemently in
many countries, are not a completely new phenomenon but have also been
historically powerful, often being supported by conservative women as
well. In addition, boundaries are raised between ‘good’ and ‘bad’
feminist positions; between feminists, who do get a word in mainstream
media and those who have no voice. Demands of feminist movements
therefore could be separated from their socially critical foundation and
have been used for modernisations in neo-liberal capitalism. This for
example holds true for the demands to radically reorganize the spheres
both of production and reproduction in the 1970s, which in many ways has
contributed to an increase of the number of working women and a greater
equality at least in some professions but has not changed the low social
status of domestic care work and reproductive work. This is also true
for the public debates about sexual violence, which is appropriated to
justify racist positions by right-wing, extremist movements in many
Western countries. All this raises questions about the possible
strategies of feminist movements to resist expropriations, separation,
and anti-feminism. And it poses the question how a re-articulation of
feminist movements and a loss of collective memory about feminist social
criticism and its activists can be prevented.
We hope for responses to this call from authors who study women’s
movements, (queer-)feminist movements, and feminist public spheres and
raise questions about
·the role of media for the strategies of feminist movements and
their articulation and intervention at different historical moments
·the significance of cultural and media productions, of
performativity and affectivity for conquering public spaces and in
the identity formation of their activists
·the changes digital media have brought about in regard to the
formation, the charcter and development of feminist movements
·the historical and recent meaning of media use for and in movements
and its immanent ambivalences
·specific practices of media use on the different levels of feminist
public spheres
·the translocal (transnational) potential to network via media,
which possibly at the same time irritates power relations and
stabilizes them
·the potential of media but also their limits for organizing and
expressing individual and collective experiences and for the
development of feminist awareness
·the mediated opportunities of negotiating histories of feminist
movements and their activists and anchor them more permanently in
the social and collective memory
·feminist representations in media and their relevance for agency
·the character, the forms and causes of anti-feminist movements,
their effects in limiting feminist public spheres and the strategies
to confront them.
/feministische studien/(feminist studies), a scientific, blind
peer-reviewed journal for interdisciplinary women and gender studies,
will in its issue 1 in 2017 include 6 to 8 articles that focus on the
issues raised in the call. We ask for scientific articles (up to 40.000
characters) or discussion papers (up to 25.000 characters), which will
be selected in a peer-review-process. We also welcome conference
reports, as well as book reviews, which preferably – but not exclusively
– relate to the focus of this issue.We kindly invite you to send an
abstract of up to 2.500 characters until *3^rd July 2016*to the editors
of the focus issue, Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Klaus (University of Salzburg),
Prof. Dr. Tanja Thomas (University of Tuebingen) and Prof. Dr. Susanne
Kinnebrock (Universtity of Augsburg).
Submission via: *(manuskripte /at/ feministische-studien.de)
<mailto:(manuskripte /at/ feministische-studien.de)>*
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